EU Court Allows EU To Hide Which Anti-Israel Groups They Fund

European Court of Justice rules on NGO Monitor petition without any hearing

Jerusalem - In a decision concerning a petition brought by Jerusalem-based research institute NGOMonitor, the European Union Court of Justice confirmed that the EU fails to act transparently in its funding of non-government organization (NGOs). The Court's decision, issued November 27, 2012, permitted these secret procedures, in violation of transparency and democracy norms, said NGOMonitor.

"For over a decade, the EU has acted with impunity in funding political advocacy NGOs with near total secrecy," said Prof. Gerald Steinberg, president of NGOMonitor. "Throughout, EU officials have attempted to justify the intense secrecy by using exaggerated claims of 'public security' and 'commercial interest.' The only reasonable conclusion is that the EU has something to hide."

In October 2008, based on the EU's freedom of information laws, NGOMonitor requested documents from the European Commission related to decision making for and evaluations of funding of Israeli political advocacy NGOs. The EU repeatedly avoided responding in a timely manner to NGOMonitor's requests, and when it did send materials to NGOMonitor, they were heavily redacted and sanitized of all relevant information. After thirteen months of obfuscation by the EU, NGOMonitorpetitioned the court in January 2010 under the European freedom of information laws in an attempt to achieve a semblance of accountability on these issues.

"The court's ruling found that the EU did not provide the documents in a timely fashion and that this 'must be regarded as an implicit decision to refuse access,'" Steinberg continued. "Moreover, in its filings to the court, the EU also admitted that officials had censored the meaningful details, including 'the conclusions of the monitoring' and 'the conclusions of the audit[s],' as well as 'additional remarks' made by evaluators. In other words, the EU was blocking independent evaluation of its NGO funding decisions, and preventing the public from knowing whether its practices are consistent with professional norms."

Despite these findings and admissions, between January 2010 and November 2012, the Court failed to hold any hearings on NGOMonitor's petition, and issued a decision without providing NGOMonitorany opportunity to appear before the Court, apparently in support of the effort to prevent publication of the protocols and evaluations.

NGOMonitor notes that EU funding, amounting to millions of euros annually, has gone to a small fringe of highly politicized groups, such as Adalah, Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions (ICAHD), Mossawa, Machsom Watch, Physicians for Human Rights-Israel (PHR-I), and Public Committee Against Torture in Israel (PCATI). An EU protocol from 1999, which was separately leaked to the public, showed blatant and purposeful manipulation of Israeli democratic processes. http://www.ngo-monitor.org.il/data/images/File/EU1999Protocols.pdf

"In addition to violating basic principles of transparency in government, this secret funding for IsraeliNGOs grossly infringes on and seeks to manipulate the Israeli democratic process," said Steinberg. "While NGOMonitor will continue to seek the relevant documents and protocols of meetings in order to provide the missing transparency and to ensure that checks and balances are applied, we note that the main point has been acknowledged by the proceedings. Members of European Parliament, European citizens, the media, and Israeli citizens whose lives are affected directly by this irresponsible practice are now very aware of the issues and their consequences."

NGOMonitor, based in Jerusalem, was founded to promote critical debate and accountability regarding the political activities of non-governmental organizations claiming a human rights agenda that are active in the Arab-Israel conflict. NGOMonitor's independent research reports and analysis are quoted frequently in the press, academic publications, by NGO officials and donors, and in governmental and parliamentary discussions.